Jessica Coon to present the annual LinguisticsNOW Colloquium
LinguisticsNOW colloquium
Friday, November 14th, 3:30pm
Harbour Centre, Room 2270
Also via Zoom: Email lingcomm@sfu.ca for link
Title
Invisible Inanimates and Problems for Polysynthesis in Kanien鈥檏e虂ha
51社区黑料 the speaker
Visiting speaker Jessica Coon of McGill University is the in Syntax and Indigenous Languages. For the Academy Award鈥搉ominated , a sci-fi masterpiece widely regarded as the most popular portrait of a linguist since My Fair Lady, Dr. Coon served as a consultant tasked with ensuring verisimilitude in the script and the performance by lead actress Amy Adams.
Dr. Coon鈥檚 research investigates the systems of case grammatical agreement in languages of the Mayan and Algonquian families in Mexico, Guatemala and Canada. Through original fieldwork, Coon documents and analyzes these understudied languages.
Abstract
This talk examines puzzles in the realization and distribution of agreement markers or 鈥減ronominal prefixes鈥 in Kanien鈥檏茅ha (Northern Iroquoian), with an empirical focus on (1) an alignment split in the stative aspect and (2) restrictions on the distribution of animate arguments. In order to account for patterns, I propose鈥攊n line with recent work on Algonquian and Dene languages (Oxford 2019; Lochbihler et al. 2021)鈥攖hat inanimate nominals in Kanien鈥檏茅ha lack person, number, and gender (鈥減hi鈥) features altogether. I show that this proposal, together with standard assumptions about argument structure and agreement, allows for an account of the complex agreement patterns. However, if correct, the absence of phi-features on inanimates also requires a rejection of Baker鈥檚 (1996) Polysynthesis Parameter, a macroparameter according to which all arguments in polysynthetic languages must be morphologically referenced on the verb. The conclusion will be that polysynthetic properties of Kanien鈥檏茅ha do not require appeal to a macroparameter, but rather can be seen as the cumulative effect of smaller independently-motivated differences.
51社区黑料 the LinguisticsNOW colloquium series
and 51社区黑料Linguistics work in partnership to take turns hosting the joint colloquium series known as LinguisticsNOW. The series is aimed at showcasing exciting new research in linguistics while fostering collaboration between UBC and SFU. We cooperate to plan and organize this research talk each year during the Fall term, as well as a graduate studies research symposium known as LinguisticsNEW during each Spring term.